It is a nice box, although many here have said that it is overpriced. Actually, I think JDS will even "personalise" their product boxes with a print to order. Apart from having nothing in particular to have printed, I did not want to affect the resale value, this being an experimental buy that could have ended up in the For-Sale forum if it hadn't suited me.the extra dosh spent on the original enclosure seems worth it
If someone needs a DAC to take central place in the hifi stack, with numerous inputs, then this is certainly not the DAC for them. This is simply a USB DAC for computer or laptop, or any USB device that is able to not only feed data to it but also power it.
If you want to listen with headphones. It won't do anything else for you.So will the o2 odac combo from jds labs be a better buy.
Or a powered USB hub, which means you could connect phones that have USB digital audio out. But USB is the only way to power the ODAC.Also does the power constraint mean that it will have to be powered thru a computer usb data connection ?
my ATH-M50 for headphone out
Was it an ODAC/O2 DAC/AMP combo?
I actually wish I'd bought one of those, even though I have other HP-Amp plans
Note: Do not connect headphones directly to the ODAC, The ODAC is a line-output device which absolutely requires connection to an external amplifier
Sorry, no pics of amazing DIY, because I went the lazy route and bought the ready-boxed (with RCA sockets) version from JDS Labs.
sometimes I find that the Jack (Linux) audio setup has forgotten about the USB DAC and I have to restart it.
.
This is a different problem, and is to do with the fact that your system is assigning device numbers as it finds stuff, and it does not find stuff in the same order on every boot.Earlier hw1 is odac USB and now its hw3...
$ aplay -l
...
...
card 2: DAC [UAC1 DAC], device 0: USB Audio [USB Audio]
Subdevices: 1/1
Subdevice #0: subdevice #0
$
$
hw:DAC,0 [USB Audio]
I was keen to hear the ODAC perform as part of a "real hifi" and, also, to see how it compares to other DACs, and how the owners of those DACs hear it. First to be arranged was a visit to Capt Rajesh, where we put it between a laptop (just plain WinXP) and his massive Dared tube amp, feeding sound into his Cadence speakers. The comparison was with his AP DAC. We listened to a variety of music from quite-heavy 60s prog rock, through vocal/acoustic to quite-heavy Western classical orchestral.
There was far less difference than I expected. I am keen on the AP kit that I have heard, it has a really lovely sound, but I thought that, quality aside, the AP might be voiced towards a warmer tone, and that, should the ODAC be as transparent as it is meant to be, there might be a noticeable contrast. That was not the case. We felt that we could perhaps detect a little more depth and/or dynamic range with the AP, but, again, signal levels differed, and we made no more than a very subjective attempt with the volume knob to equalise them. I felt the tests were complimentary to both DACs. If the ODAC is transparent then so is the AP; if the AP is musical, then so is the ODAC.